On-Duty Officer Involved Shootings Data

Throughout my entire career as a Law Enforcement Officer, the citizens have shown great trust and confidence in the Police. We all understand that this trust is hard to earn, but easy to lose. Our pledge remains to continue to work as hard to maintain and improve citizens' trust as we did to earn it. In an effort to increase transparency, officer accountability, and improve officer safety, the below policy changes and initiatives were implemented. Many of those changes came after an officer involved shooting in 2012 and include:

Notification of the FBI Civil Rights Office at the time of all officer involved shootings

Development of a foot pursuit policy

Implementation of a response to resistance report that documents officers' use of force to overcome resistant suspects

Enhanced review of digital video recordings by a specialized unit

Improved consensual search policy to require written or video documentation that a citizen voluntarily consented to a search

Created a community engagement team with the Community Affairs Unit to respond to community concerns and manage programs that create community trust and engagement

Mandated that all officers receive Taser training and maintain their certification

Conducted reviews of departments under investigation or consent decree by the Justice Department to understand past failures and determine best practices in the management of officer involved shooting incidents

These changes also include how we communicate with our community, equipment upgrades and continued "use of force" training of the more than 3000 sworn members of the Dallas Police Department. I believe that these changes have and will continue to positively impact officer safety and improve public trust and confidence.

In an effort to provide greater transparency, the Dallas Police Department looks to share any information available with the community when an officer is involved in a shooting. This process of transparency begins at the scene of an OIS shooting with press briefings and social media communications and continues with additional updates as information becomes available. We believe that this is an expectation of the community that will increase trust and legitimacy in OIS investigative process.

Lethal Force Philosophy of the Dallas Police Department

Protection of human life is a primary goal of the Dallas Police Department; therefore, our officers have a responsibility to use only the degree of force necessary to protect and preserve life. Deadly force will be used with great restraint and as a last resort only when the level of resistance warrants the use of deadly force. The Dallas Police Department places a greater value on human life than on the protection of property; therefore, the use of deadly force is not allowed to protect property interests.

Each officer involved shooting encounter is unique. Once our investigative process is completed, we will post each incident on this site. We will provide as much information as possible, to include statistical information, a narrative of the incident and the grand jury disposition.

Dallas police officers respond to approximately 600,000 calls for service each year. Combined with these calls are the numerous citizen contacts made when officers provide general assistance, participate in community engagement programs, enforce traffic laws and take proactive enforcement to disrupt and interdict criminal activities, leading to roughly 1,000,000 citizen contacts per year. Day in and day out these numerous contacts result in providing professional service to our citizens and make Dallas a safer community to live.

Sometimes these contacts place officers in dangerous situations. Officers have an occupational responsibility to enter into circumstances which clearly could place them in danger while they are serving the community. All the while, officers have an affirmative obligation to use lethal force as a last resort and are specifically trained to use reasonable alternatives as time and opportunities permit. Yet there are incidents in which the use of lethal force cannot be avoided.

When an officer becomes involved in an incident in which another person is seriously injured or killed, or where a death or serious injury occurs to a person in police custody, two different investigations begin immediately. Responding supervisors take detailed actions to preserve the crime scene and isolate involved personnel. Notifications are made for specialized resources to respond. Internal communications are made to affected police commanders and the Chief of Police. Involved personnel are removed from field duty pending a thorough and unbiased review of their actions.

A criminal investigation is conducted by the Special Investigations Unit (SIU). SIU is comprised of experienced homicide detectives and seasoned leadership. These detectives interview all witnesses and direct an exhaustive collection of evidence. Specially trained Crime Scene physical evidence detectives assist SIU. Initial findings are shared with the FBI Civil Rights Unit within the first 24 hours. The completed investigation is referred to the Dallas County District Attorney's Office for independent review.

The District Attorney's Office then presents the case to a Grand Jury of county citizens for examination. The Grand Jury makes a determination whether or not the officer committed a criminal act when involved in the OIS. If the Grand Jury concludes that the officer's actions did not constitute a criminal action, the officer is no-billed, meaning he/she is not charged with a crime. However, if the Grand Jury determines the officer's actions were of a criminal nature the officer will be true-billed, meaning he/she will be charged with a criminal offense.

A concurrent administrative investigation is performed by the Internal Affairs Division (IAD). This review determines whether the officer's actions are in compliance with departmental policy, training and use of force guidelines. Outcomes from this investigation guide the department toward improving its training and procedures. Additionally, if the IAD investigation finds that an officer violated policy, whether or not the shooting was justified, disciplinary action or additional training may be imposed.

The Dallas Police Department continually reviews the use of deadly force and strives to develop training and procedures that can assist in reducing the likelihood that deadly force will become an option. The following is indicative of steps taken by the department to assist officers in resolving incidents without having to resort to deadly force.

Departmental Philosophy Statement - The Dallas Police Department has instituted a philosophy statement that guides officers in the use of force. It recognizes that protection of human life is the primary goal of the department.

Training - The Police Department provides a myriad of training opportunities that are designed to enhance officer safety while reinforcing the department's police statement. Some of the training provided is as follows:

Reality Based Training where lessons learned are combined with policy, tactics and strategies to simulate critical incidents as realistically as possible to strengthen response and increase successful outcomes.

Diversity training nurtures respect of social differences and cultivates community aspects.

Verbal Skills training to foster effective communication and expected outcomes during interaction between officers and the public.

Use of Force training bolsters officers' obligation to use only the degree of force necessary to control a situation.

Legal training is provided to reinforce understanding the legitimacy of the public's interest in the actions and expectations of its Police Department.

Tasers are less lethal weapons that are known as an effective tool to mitigate the use of deadly force. The Dallas Police Department's goal is to ensure that all uniformed first responders are equipped with this tool.

Body Cameras are recognized as an emerging technology with vast potential. The use of body cameras is designed to enhance officer professionalism and put an unruly suspect on notice that their actions are being recorded, thus reducing the likelihood of an incident escalating to the need to deploy deadly force. The Dallas Police Department's goal is to have a body camera at the scene of each police incident.

Use of Force Reporting has been established to identify trends, improve training and safety and provide timely information to DPD regarding "response to resistance" issues.